Leo Frank was accused of raping and killing a little girl named Mary Phagan in a pencil factory on April 26, 1915. Frank insisted on his innocence all along but was hung from a tree by an angry mob.
On May 24, 1913, Jim Conley, the man many believe killed Phagan, told police that Leo Frank had put him up to writing a note that was found with her body. Frank would be convicted, exonerated, and ultimately lynched, in this sad tale of anti-Semitism, a clash of cultures, and an egregious miscarriage of justice.
